Snap acquires the crucial geofilter patent from Mobli for a record $7.7M

According to Snap’s S-1 Filing for its IPO, of the $400m in revenues the company has, $360 million is made by selling “Geofilters”, or photo filters based on location which advertisers can buy. So owning the patent on that concept would seem pretty crucial. But Snapchat has never had such a patent, until now.

Mobli, an Instagram competitor launched 6 years ago which failed to get ahead of its competitor, actually patented the idea of Geo-photo filters in 2012, after launching it the previous year.

But according to sources, serial entrepreneur and investor Moshe Hogeg, who co-founded Mobli, sold Mobli’s Geofilters patent to Snap this month for $7.7 million. This is believed to be the highest amount paid for a patent from the Israeli tech industry. The news was confirmed in an email to Mobli’s 100 shareholders obtained by TechCrunch in the form of a screen grab, displayed below:

The patent (US#20160373805, US#9459778) was named Methods and Systems of providing visual content editing functions. The specific nature of the patent covered server side filters, meaning the filter was coming from the server instead of from inside the app, which means the app itself doesn’t have to be updated every time there is a new Geo-photo filter to push.

TechCrunch understands that Mobli first spoke to Facebook about selling the patent. Facebook “100% wanted it” according to one source.

However, off the record sources at Facebook poured scorn on the idea that the company had even been offered the patent and said “no-one has any idea who these Mobli people even are.”

Facebook’s official spokesperson said the company had no comment to make.

Whatever the case, had Facebook secured the patent, it would have destroyed Snapchat’s ability to garner revenues from geo-filters, and thus Snapchats main source of income.

Typically patents can cost $10,000 to $300, or up to a million. The most expensive in Israel to date was a $2.7m patent to do with Google Maps.

Mobli’s original patent for Geofilters was approved in 2014, long before Snapchat created the Geofilters feature.

Asked to confirm the story Moshe Hogeg replied to TechCrunch with “No comment”. We have reached out to Snap for comment.